As a 12-year old boy, Marin Constantin witnessed the full horror of the Holocaust after he was taken from his home in Romania to what he believed was Ukraine. Forced to work in fields, harvesting vegetables for meagre rations, Marin Constantin recounts a time of mass inhumanity and brutality, particularly towards Roma people. Speaking to the Council of Europe, he said that his ordeal, between 1942-1944, haunted him long after he escaped and returned home.

This spot aims to make lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people aware that they should not be discriminated against on the grounds of their sexual orientation or gender identity. In 2010 the Council of Europe made history when its Committee of Ministers adopted a recommendation calling on member states to combat such discrimination, which often takes the form of homophobia, transphobia and other forms of intolerance.

In this spot, made by students at Lisbon's Lusofona University in support of the Living Together campaign, our stereotypes of Islamic terrorism are challenged when a seemingly sinister activity turns out to have a completely innocent purpose.